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WordWorth | 1991-05-16 | 8.0 KB | 114 lines |
- William Wordsworth
-
-
- William Wordsworth was born on the 7th April 1770 at Cockermouth in Cumberland,
- England. He grew up in the beautiful lake district that was later to provide
- inspiration for much of his poetry and philosophy. His early boyhood was
- marred by the tragedy that was to accompany him throughout life. When he was
- just eight years old his mother died, followed by his father five years later.
- From a young age, he was very aware that the way in which he lived would have a
- profound influence upon his creativity. He later put many of his experiences
- into the largely autobiographical poem, The Prelude, recognising that this was
- an unconventional method of writing poetry: "A thing unprecedented in literary
- history that a man should talk so much about himself."
-
- Strong contemporary opinion held that to use poetry to describe normal,
- everyday occurrences was to demean the form. Wordsworth, on the contrary, used
- poetry to exalt the everyday and commonplace, believing it represented the
- truest part of human nature. In his poems: "Low and rustic life was generally
- chosen, because in that condition the essential passions of the heart find a
- better soil in which they can attain their maturity. . . in that condition the
- passions of men are incorporated with the beautiful and permanent forms of
- nature."
-
- At the age of 17, Wordsworth was admitted to Cambridge University, and his
- first published poem: Sonnet: On Seeing Miss Helen Maria Williams Weep at a
- Tale of Distress was published in the same year. In 1790, with a college
- friend, Robert Jones, Wordsworth made the first of many walking tours to
- France, also visiting Switzerland. From this first visit, Wordsworth formed an
- attachment to France and a love for the country that was to stay with him all
- his life. After graduating, Wordsworth moved to France.
-
- He had an affair with Annette Vallon in the spring of the following year at
- Blois. On Dec 15th 1792, she gave birth to his illegitimate daughter Caroline.
- In 1793, Wordsworth returned to England. From the following year he stayed
- with his sister, Dorothy, who lived with him for most of her life, even after
- his marriage. In 1795 he was left 900 by Raisley Calvert, whom he had helped
- to nurse during a long sickness. This was a considerable amount of money, and
- whilst he had never been poor, he became increasingly affluent. He also met
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge in this year, and formed the basis of the friendship
- that would later result in the publication of the revolutionary Lyrical Ballads
- .
-
- The poems that Wordsworth had begun to write were revolutionary for many
- reasons. Most significantly, he succeeded in moving away from the conventional
- poetry written by his contemporaries. He hated stylized and flowery poetry,
- and the use of rhetoric for the sake of rhetoric. Wordsworth wanted to write
- simply, for the commemoration of nature and of humanity. In the preface to
- Lyrical Ballads , he wrote: "The principal object, then, which I proposed to
- myself in these poems was to choose incidents and situations from common life
- and to relate or describe them throughout, as far as was possible in a
- selection of language really used by men." This may appear strange to the
- modern reader when considering, for example, I wandered lonely as a cloud,'
- perhaps the most famous of Wordsworth's poems. The metaphors he uses may not
- sound as if they relate to the voice of the common man, yet this poem
- illustrates the second half of his inspiration, celebration of nature, in a
- very personal manner.
-
- William Wordsworth was a strange mixture of realist and idealist. Although his
- life-philosophy was based upon a deep love for nature and for the common man,
- he himself came from more affluent society, and considered himself superior to
- those he romanticised, describing a poet as: "A man . . . endued with more
- lively sensibility, more enthusiasm and tenderness, who has a greater knowledge
- of human nature and a more comprehensive soul, than are supposed to be common
- among mankind." In spite of this, it was his greatest ambition to be simply:
- "A man speaking to men."
-
- In 1802 he married Mary Hutchinson, with whom he had five children (two died in
- infancy and one later in life). His brother John was killed in 1804. In spite
- of his natural emotional distress, Wordsworth remained a prolific writer. More
- than any other poet, he illustrated the nature of the early English Romantic
- Movement. The date usually given to the origin of the movement is 1798, the
- same year that Wordsworth and Coleridge completed their first edition of
- Lyrical Ballads . The Romantic Movement was characterised by revolution -
- political and poetical: Through his poetry, Wordsworth responded to the changes
- taking place in his society - namely, the repressive measures introduced by the
- English government in response to the Revolution in France.
-
- He stood at the forefront of English intellectuals who supported the French
- Revolution and felt that it represented a shift in the power balance towards
- the working classes, and would therefore be desirable in England. He reacted
- strongly against the move away from rural life towards the greater urbanisation
- of the population believing that uniformity of industrial occupation and the
- desire for more technical information were killing off the finer instincts
- found in mankind - the purer feelings characterised by a rural idyll.
-
- In 1835 his sister Dorothy had a complete mental breakdown, from which she
- never recovered. This seemed to mark a turning point in his life. He lost
- much of his radicalism, and conformed more and more with the social position he
- occupied, rather than with his youthful ideals. In 1843 he became poet
- Laureate. Two years later he attended the Queen's Ball in London. Both of
- these actions were considered by the second generation romantic poets - Keats,
- Shelley and Byron, as a betrayal of what the Romantic movement stood for. On
- the 23 April 1850, at the age of 80, Wordsworth died.
-
- By using the imagery of nature, Wordsworth had striven to rediscover something
- that he felt his generation had lost. He believed: "Poetry is the spontaneous
- overflow of powerful feelings: It takes its origin from emotion recollected in
- tranquillity".
-
- As he grew older, however, his emotions and passions had mellowed and his verse
- grew more akin to that he had earlier rejected. Even his earlier poetry was not
- seen by everyone as being merit-worthy. Due to the originality of its form and
- content, Wordsworth's contribution to literature was not always recognised.
- Hazlitt, a contemporary writer and critic, said of his poems in 1825: "The
- vulgar do not read them: the learned . . . do not understand them, the great
- despise [and] the fashionable . . . ridicule them."
-
- Today, Wordsworth's enormous contribution to poetry is generally recognised.
- His work may appear rhetorical and artificial by modern standards - after all
- it is two hundred years old - but he created the potential for a true form of
- poetry for the people. A poetry that can be used as a common language of
- emotion and perception and that does not depend upon education or social
- status, either for creation or comprehension.
-